Cross-regional coordination of activity in the human brain during autobiographical self-referential processing

Author:

Stieger James R.12,Pinheiro-Chagas Pedro1ORCID,Fang Ying3ORCID,Li Jian4ORCID,Lusk Zoe12ORCID,Perry Claire M.12ORCID,Girn Manesh5,Contreras Diego6,Chen Qi3ORCID,Huguenard John R.27ORCID,Spreng R. Nathan5ORCID,Edlow Brian L.4ORCID,Wagner Anthony D.78ORCID,Buch Vivek9,Parvizi Josef1279ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience, Human Intracranial Cognitive Electrophysiology Program, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305

2. Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305

3. School of Psychology, South China Normal University, Guangzhou 510631, China

4. Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, MA 02129

5. Montreal Neurological Institute, Department Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Montreal, QC H3G 1A4, Canada

6. Department of Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104

7. Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute, Stanford, CA 94305

8. Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

9. Department of Neurosurgery, Stanford University, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305

Abstract

For the human brain to operate, populations of neurons across anatomical structures must coordinate their activity within milliseconds. To date, our understanding of such interactions has remained limited. We recorded directly from the hippocampus (HPC), posteromedial cortex (PMC), ventromedial/orbital prefrontal cortex (OFC), and the anterior nuclei of the thalamus (ANT) during two experiments of autobiographical memory processing that are known from decades of neuroimaging work to coactivate these regions. In 31 patients implanted with intracranial electrodes, we found that the presentation of memory retrieval cues elicited a significant increase of low frequency (LF < 6 Hz) activity followed by cross-regional phase coherence of this LF activity before select populations of neurons within each of the four regions increased high-frequency (HF > 70 Hz) activity. The power of HF activity was modulated by memory content, and its onset followed a specific temporal order of ANT→HPC/PMC→OFC. Further, we probed cross-regional causal effective interactions with repeated electrical pulses and found that HPC stimulations cause the greatest increase in LF-phase coherence across all regions, whereas the stimulation of any region caused the greatest LF-phase coherence between that particular region and ANT. These observations support the role of the ANT in gating, and the HPC in synchronizing, the activity of cortical midline structures when humans retrieve self-relevant memories of their past. Our findings offer a fresh perspective, with high temporal fidelity, about the dynamic signaling and underlying causal connections among distant regions when the brain is actively involved in retrieving self-referential memories from the past.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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